A young boy miraculously survived a plane crash that killed all other 103 passengers - including his parents and brother.
Ruben van Assouw, aged nine and from the Netherlands, was found still strapped into his seat surrounded by aircraft debris after surviving the Afriqiyah Airways crash back in May 2010.
At the time, it made little Ruben one of just 14 sole survivors of serious plane crashes, The Mirror reports.
Rescue teams discovered the lad in the wreckage of the Libyan-owned Airbus A330-200, which exploded and disintegrated in the air as it approached Tripoli Airport in May 2010.
He was admitted to hospital where medics operated on him for four hours after his frightening ordeal.
His legs were severely impacted and broken in several places and couldn't move parts of his injured body, with fears his brain may have been bruised.
His parents were sadly pronounced dead from the crash, reports Daily Mail.
It was reported that when he was asked by medics where he was from, Ruben managed to mumble: "Holland, Holland."
Afriqiyah Airways confirmed that two Britons and an Irish citizen were among those who had died when Flight 771 from Johannesburg, South Africa, erupted as it came in to land at Tripoli, Libya.
A source commented: "It’s an absolute miracle that he got out."
"The plane crashed next to the runway. It was around a metre away.
"The body of the plane completely disintegrated, meaning most people would have died straight away."
It was reported that the pilot was said to have warned air traffic controllers that there was an issue as he approached Tripoli airport.
Officials said at the time that weather conditions and visibility were good and ruled out the possibility of terrorism.
Close relatives issued a statement confirming extended family would be looking after Ruben and requesting to not be contacted by the media, reports NBC News.
Tilburg mayor Ivo Opstelten said on Dutch television: "Let's make sure he can catch his breath peacefully in the arms of relatives.
The child and his family need to find "a kind of balance with each other, so they can start sketching a future."
Ruben attended the Yore elementary school in Tilburg. The school director Elly Sebregts said at the time: "When he comes back — we don't know exactly how things are going to go — but when he comes back to school, we're going to take awfully good care of him.
"That's the school's job, I think. What we can do for him, in the school sphere, we will do."
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